• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Fast Leaf Hypothesis: Scientists Discover Sneaky Way Trees Use Geometry To Hog Nutrients

May 17, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

If you pay any attention to the world around you, you are likely aware of how deciduous trees shed leaves, pollen, seeds, fruits, and yet more pollen into the world around them.

Nature, and the process of evolution, has come up with ingenious ways for trees to spread their seeds around far and wide. These include offering treats to animals that unknowingly transport the seeds elsewhere (sometimes in their digestive system) to be planted, explosions of seed pods, and dispersing through the wind.

“Birches also use the wind for pollination, as well as to distribute their seeds. They produce large numbers of tiny, lightweight winged seeds called samaras, which float and glide on air currents. Willows instead release fluffy seeds which use a parachute effect to ride the breeze,” the UK’s Woodland Trust explains of the wind dispersal mechanism.

“Ash, field maple, and hornbeam seeds generate their own lift with their specially designed wings. These ‘helicopter seeds’ spin as they fall, creating a type of flight known as autorotation.”



Deciduous trees shed their leaves annually, losing around 40 percent of the carbon they have assimilated, and substantial amounts of nutrients in the process. But they do not have to be lost forever, and can be recycled by the tree itself if they land and decompose close enough to the parent tree.

“Evolutionary thinking suggests that trees may optimise their leaves to deposit where their nutrients can be recycled, and locally improve soil conditions,” Matthew D. Biviano and Kaare H. Jensen, from the Department of Physics at the Technical University of Denmark, explain in a new paper. 

“Shape adaptations that take advantage of aerodynamic effects allow, e.g., the parachuting dandelion seed, the gliding Javan cucumber seed, or the helicopter maple seeds to fall slowly and be carried by the wind to settle remarkably far from the parent plant. In contrast to pollen and seeds, however, leaves must fall to the ground quickly to achieve a proximal concentration of nutrients.”

The team investigated how the shape of the leaves of deciduous trees affects how they fall, using an “automated sedimentation apparatus” to conduct 100 free fall experiments a day on biomimetic paper leaves. The leaves were dropped into water, allowing them to analyze the descent.

The team found that most of the “leaves” fell quickly, which is vital if the leaves are to fall near the tree, where their nutrients and carbon can be recycled. 

“The majority of 25 representative leaves settle at rates similar to our control (a circular disc). Strikingly, the Arabidopsis mutant asymmetric leaves1 (as1) fell 15% slower than the wild type. Applying the as1-digital mutation to deciduous tree leaves revealed a similar speed reduction,” the team write. 

“Data correlating shape and settling across a broad range of natural, mutated, and artificial leaves support the fast-leaf-hypothesis: Deciduous leaves are symmetric and relatively unlobed in part because this maximizes their settling speed and concomitant nutrient retention.”

Non-symmetric leaves were found to fall more slowly, due to the way they twirled as they fell. 

“We propose that symmetry in deciduous leaf shape is evolutionarily driven by an aspiration to fall rapidly,” the team added. “This, in turn, facilitates local nutrient recycling through the soil, thus promoting the fitness of trees and their offspring.”

While interesting, and certainly plausible, the team stresses that there are other factors which affect the shape of leaves, though nutrient recycling may be a large factor. They add that climate change has been shown to significantly affect leaf shapes and symmetry, and this in turn may affect nutrient recycling in trees.

The study is published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. MLB roundup: Salvador Perez breaks single-season HR mark for catchers
  2. Was Stonehenge A Giant Calendar? The Truth Is Perhaps More Difficult
  3. First Clear Evidence Of Neanderthals Hunting Lions Shows They Were Not Boneheads
  4. How To Watch The First Ever Crewed Launch Of Starliner Next Week

Source Link: Fast Leaf Hypothesis: Scientists Discover Sneaky Way Trees Use Geometry To Hog Nutrients

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Have You Seen This Snake? Florida Wants Your Help Finding Rare Species Seen Once In 50 Years
  • Plague Confirmed In Lake Tahoe Area For First Time In 5 Years, California Officials Say
  • Supergiant Star Spotted Blowing Milky Way’s Largest Bubble Of Its Kind, Surprising Astronomers
  • Game Theory Promised To Explain Human Decisions. Did It?
  • Genes, Hormones, And Hairstyling – Here Are Some Causes Of Hair Loss You Might Not Have Heard Of
  • Answer To 30-Year-Old Mystery Code Embedded In The Kryptos CIA Sculpture To Be Sold At Auction
  • Merry Mice: Human Brain Cells Transplanted Into Mice Reduce Anxiety And Depression
  • Asteroid-Bound NASA Mission Snaps Earth-Moon Portrait From 290 Million Kilometers Away
  • Forget State Mammals – Some States Have Official Dinosaurs, And They’re Awesome
  • Female Jumping Spiders Of Two Species Prefer The Sexy Red Males Of One, Leading To Hybridization
  • Why Is It So Difficult To Find New Moons In The Solar System?
  • New “Oxygen-Breathing” Crystal Could Recharge Fuel Cells And More
  • Some Gut Bacteria Cause Insomnia While Others Protect Against It, 400,000-Person Study Argues
  • Neanderthals And Homo Sapiens Got It On 100,000 Years Earlier Than We Thought
  • “Womb Of The Universe”: Native American Tribal Elders Help Archaeologists Decipher Ancient Rock Art In Missouri Cave
  • 16,000-Year-Old Paintings Suggest Prehistoric Humans Risked Their Lives To Enter “Shaman Training Cave”
  • Final Gasps Of A Dying Star Seen Through A Record-Breaking 130 Years Of Data
  • COVID-19 “Vaccine Alternative” Injection Could Be On Fast-Track To Approval From FDA
  • New Jersey Officials Investigate Possible First Locally Acquired Malaria Case Since 1991
  • First-of-Its-Kind Bright Orange Nurse Shark Recorded Off Costa Rica Makes History
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version